
Contents
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Humanitarian Roots: The History of French Charity Humanitarian Roots: The History of French Charity
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The New Humanitarianism: Introducing MSF and SAMU Social The New Humanitarianism: Introducing MSF and SAMU Social
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Challenging Borders: Universalisms and the Suffering of Humanity Challenging Borders: Universalisms and the Suffering of Humanity
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The Right to Intervene: Third-Worldism versus the New Civilizing Mission The Right to Intervene: Third-Worldism versus the New Civilizing Mission
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The Duty to Bear Witness: Neutrality and Politics The Duty to Bear Witness: Neutrality and Politics
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Conclusion: Medical HumaniTarianism and Its Diaspora Conclusion: Medical HumaniTarianism and Its Diaspora
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Two Genealogies of Care: The New Humanitarianism
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Published:August 2011
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Abstract
This chapter traces the genealogy of one critical transnational regime of care—what has been called the “new humanitarianism,” referring to the movement of sans-frontière-isme that started with Médecins sans Frontières in 1971. The chapter suggests that, in practice, this shift to the moral imperative occurs through a conflation of the social, the political, and the medical: for instance, illness becomes one of the primary ways not only to render visible but to experience forms of alienation, isolation, malaise, inequality, hardship, violence, or disability. It also explores the increasing emphasis on doing politics through regimes of care by discussing two movements born about twenty years apart, but brought into the world by many of the same actors: Médecins sans Frontières and SAMU Social, the social emergency service.
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